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1

Infant and Toddler Care

Creating a Culturally Sensitive Climate

Introduction

Ava S. Armstead

CAP Tulsa – Program

Development

Specialist

Poll – Whose Here Today

Administrator/Director

Infant/Toddler Teacher

Trainer/Educator

Home Child Care Provider

Parent

College Student

Home Visitor

Other

Candy Icebreaker

5

Red - Favorite Hobbies

Green – Favorite Place on Earth

Yellow - Dream Job

Pink – Favorite Childhood Memory

Purple or Blue - Wildcard

Purpose of Today’s Workshop

Creating a Culturally Sensitive Climate◦ Increase participants understanding of the critical role that caregivers play in

the process of infants’ identity development.

Relationships Matter◦ Explore how emotional connectedness with others is central to how young

children learn from the earliest stages of life.

Understanding Temperament and Goodness

of Fit◦ Looking at social emotional milestones through temperament traits

All Behaviors have Meaning◦ Understanding behavior as an expressive form of communication

7

“Culture influences every aspect of human development

and is reflected in childrearing beliefs and practices

designed to promote healthy adaptation.”

Experience

creates

Expectationwhich alters

Perception

Climate

of Care

“We each bring our life experiences and

different perspectives to this training

session. These differences provide a wealth

of real situations, specific challenges, and

practical strategies in providing services to

infants, toddlers, and their families. This

session is a special opportunity to share and

refine our skills in harmonizing cultural

diversity for sensitive infant care.”

Children see themselves only as they are

seen by the adults in their lives. When

children see themselves through culturally

responsive eyes, they will see their real

power.

~ Carol Brunson Day

9

Identity development in Infants

“Identity is a set of organized beliefs about

ourselves that influence how we behave in

social settings.”

From birth infants are in the process of

becoming individuals.

Development of strong attachment

relationships with family and caregivers is a

“central task” of infancy.

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Basic Assumptions

Healthy identity formation in infants is based on a strong connection to their family.

Identity formation is a critical part of development in the first three years of life.

Appropriate care of infants (care that supports identity formation) requires consistency between the child’s home culture/language and the program.

Creating consistency between home culture and program means establishing on-going partnerships with parents.

Infants, their families, and the programs that serve them are all affected by the attitudes and assumptions of the society in which they operate.

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Self Identity Values Beliefs

Attitudes Behaviors

Culture

Race Skin

Color or Tone

Power Social Class

Ethnicity

Cultural Sensitivity

It requires:

An ongoing awareness of ourselves and of other people

A commitment to learn about other cultural perspectives

A willingness to dialogue and negotiate about different

perspectives13

Cultural Sensitivity is…

an ongoing awareness of our own and other’s cultural contexts.

It is a continued willingness to see the world from many

different and equally valid perspectives.

Child Rearing Matrix

What are some things you noticed during this experience?

What do you know that you didn’t know before?

What part of this experience was most valuable to you?

How does this experience further inform your practices with infants, toddlers and their families? 14

Identity begins very early, infants are

competent in engaging in social interactions

from birth.

Identity is a complex process combining both

social and group characteristics and

individual personality traits.

15

When the family’s culture is ignored or when

infant care teachers react to children who are

culturally different from them as though they

are deficient, underdeveloped, or

incompetent, children experience problems in

communication, in getting their needs met,

and in establishing relationships.

~ Carol Brunson Day

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Objectives

To understand early experiences effect on brain development

To explore the relationship between attachment and attunement

To use research to inform and facilitate responsive caregiving

To understand temperaments and goodness of fit

To understand that all behavior has meaning.

Identify strategies for supporting positive behavioral outcomes.

Part 1: Relationships Matter

Explore how emotional connectedness with others is central to how young children learn from the earliest

stages of life.

Early Experiences

Think about your earliest experiences as a

child. What was the expectation by adults?

How were you fed?◦ Were you given choices at mealtime? Were you forced to eat?

How were you disciplined?◦ Who disciplined you? At what age were children expected to obey adults?

What were some of the gender roles?◦ Were there different rules for boys and girls? Were there restrictions based on gender?

Did children have rights?◦ Were they respected? Were they allowed to say NO? Were they forced to share?

Early Experiences

Making the connection between our early

experiences and caregiving priorities will

help us identify our caregiving practices and

ensure that as we needed caregivers that

were responsive to us, we are becoming

responsive caregivers to the children in our

care.

Early Experiences and Brain

Development

The brain is directly shaped by interpersonal

experiences

Human connections create the neural

connections from which the mind emerges

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Brain Development

Brain Myths

Brain Development

What do you think would be most important

for infant care teachers and families with

infants and toddlers to know about early

brain development?

Brain Development

Early experiences can determine how genes are turned on and off — and even whether some are expressed at all.

Genes are responsible for the basic wiring plan—for forming all of the cells (neurons) and general connections between different brain regions.

Experiences are responsible for fine-tuning those connections, helping each child adapt to the particular environment

Brain Development

The brain is particularly responsive to

experiences and environments during early

development.

Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE)

An adverse childhood experience (ACE) describes a traumatic experience in a person’s life occurring before the age of 18 that the person remembers as an adult.

Exposure to ACES is linked to negative outcomes later in life.

ACE’s Screener

ACE Questionnaire -

The Adverse

Childhood Experience

(ACE) Questionnaire

is a 10-item self-report

measure developed

for the ACE study to

identify adverse

childhood

experiences.

Attachment and Attunement are

related

Attachment is an emotional bond to another

person.

Attachment builds connections.

Attachment and Attunement are

related

Attunement is being aware of, and

responsive to, another.

Attunement builds trust and safety.

Responsive Caregiving

PITC Philosophy

“The relationship between an infant and her

or his caregiver is at the heart of high quality

infant/toddler care. Through experiencing the

warmth and support of caring adults,

children gain a basis for development and

learning in all domains – physical, cognitive,

and social-emotional.

The responsive process

Infant and caregivers read one another's

state of mind in back-and-forth

conversations

Adult should be in tune to the infant’s

emotional state when responding

Watch-Ask-Adapt

The Responsive Process

Getting In Tune

What are some of your difficult issues/reactions in dealing with children?

Think about:

1) What personal values may be involved that contribute to your reaction?

2) How you might deal with the feeling(s) to avoid negative impact on children.

Learn the responsive process.

What kinds of things might you do to get more in tune with the children in your care?

Getting In Tune

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Part 2: Understanding Temperament and

Goodness of Fit

Looking at social emotional development through temperament

Culture impacts everything

Culture is powerful

Culturally consistent care is a must

Dependence Independence

Interdependence

Culture in

Social and Emotional Development

Describe your Ideal Child?

Active Approaching Cautious

Cooperative Dependable

Honest Independent Industrious

Loyal Obedient Persistent Quiet

Predictable Playful Assertive

Confident Curious Sensitive

Sense of Humor Takes Risks Spirited

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Which one describes you?

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SOCIAL EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT

the developing capacity of the child frombirth through five years of age to form close and secure adult and peer relationships;ability to experience, regulate, and express emotions in socially and culturally appropriate ways; andexplore the environment and learn—all in the context of family, community, and culture.

42

What is Social Emotional

Development?

Self Awareness

Self Management

Social Awareness

Relationship Skills

Responsible Decision-Making

43

Supporting Social Emotional

HealthCaregiver’s

Contributions

Physical/psychological

well-being

Presence/absence of

support

Personal history

Temperament

Socioeconomic status

Goodness of fit

Indicators of S/E

Health

Capacity to Trust

Capacity to Relate

Capacity to take

pleasure in ourselves

and others

Capacity to feel

effective and the ability

to expect this44

Still Face Video

Sense of self, others & the world

Feelings and expectations

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6czxW4R9w2g

WHY DO EARLY

RELATIONSHIPS

MATTER?

https://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/building-babies-brains-through-play-mini-

parenting-master-class/

Young Infant

Birth to 8 months

Developed by Pat Franco and Joanne Sato. © WestEd, The Program for Infant/Toddler Care. This document may

be reproduced for educational purposes.

Mobile Infant

6 to 18 months

Older Infant

16 to 36

months

Reflections about

Temperaments Why does understanding Temperament matter?

How would you describe your Temperament?

Do you have a preferred Temperament when you think about the children in your room?

How do you handle a non-preferred Temperament of a child in your room?

How do you create “GOODNESS OF FIT”?50

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Part 3: All Behaviors have Meaning

Understanding behavior as an expressive form of communication

Key Objectives:

Understanding all behavior has meaning.

Early experiences in relationships create a

lens of expectations for how people will treat

you.

Importance of adapting to the child’s cues.

Discuss strategies for supporting positive

behavioral outcomes.

PAYING ATTENTION WITH AN OPEN HEART

Why do you think young children need attention?

Why is giving it to them so important?

Describe a memory/experience from your own childhood where you did or did not receive attention. What did that felt like? (positive or negative)

EVERYONE NEEDS ATTENTION

Understanding that

children are whole,

complex human beings

influenced by genetics,

socioemotional and

cultural environment.

They are not simply a

sum of behaviors.

WHY DO THEY DO THAT?

Have you ever heard or said

the following?

• He’s Doing That On Purpose!

• She Just Wants My Attention!

• He’s Trying To Manipulate

Me!

• He Knows Better Than That!

Perhaps the child has other

reasons…

Behavior is always a Hot

topic

Parents want to talk

about it…

Infant Care Teachers

want to talk about it…

But what behavior are

they wanting to

discuss?

WHAT IS SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL

DEVELOPMENT?

Self Others

Experience, express, and

manage emotions

Establish positive and

rewarding relationships

with others.

Behavior = CommunicationAll Behavior Has Meaning

Babies communicate

through behavior from

birth

Behavior continues to

communicate an message

when a child doesn’t have

language

Even when a child has

language, behavior still

communicates

ESSENTIAL NEEDS FOR THE DEVELOPING

BRAIN

Behavior

Expresses…

• What the child is

experiencing?

• What it’s like to be in that

child’s body?

• What it’s like to be in that

child’s world?

• Understanding the

intention from the

child’s perspective

can change the

way we react to

behavior

What is the Intention of “Getting Attention”?

Behavior for Attention

Attention is a difficult hurdle for

adults. (Plank 2016)

Adults feel that children are

constantly seeking our attention.

Often they are!

Many teachers view attention

seeking behavior as negative –

something that get’s in the way of

their learning

WHEN WE FACE OURSELVES

“Attention getting” is a complex issue in our work with young children.

We become more aware of our emotional development.

We understand children’s need for attention.

Even if we had to develop all kinds of ways of seeking it ourselves.

EACH CHILD IS UNIQUE

What Affects Discipline:

Generations of parenting

Cultural norms, (doing it differently or same from what happened to me)

Media

Education

Other family members, family dynamics

Birth order

Temperaments

Learning styles

Perceptions

WHAT DO THEY REALLY WANT?

Connection:

• Quest for security

• Attachment

• Understanding

Interaction:

• Social beings

• Respect/acceptance

• Building brains

Help:

• To do/get something

• Initiate play, Be successful

SCENARIO 1

Erica and Logan are playing in the “Dump & Fill”

center. Logan begins screeching and looking at

the teacher. The teacher notices that Erica has

the big bowl away from Logan. Logan want

attention but for what?

Connection?

Interaction?

Help?

Scenario 2

Michael and Arianna are sitting at the dramatic play table with

their teacher , Ms. Mae. Ms. Mae looks over to another area.

Michael hits the toy plate and knocks it off the table. He reaches

for the pretend food on teacher’s plate. Arianna reaches for the

food and Michael quickly grabs it. Arianna fusses when she and

Michael are both reaching for the food. Right after Michael got

the pretend food, he bit it. A few seconds later, he throws it

between Arianna and the teacher who is now talking with the

children in the other area. Michael: Attention for what?

Connection?

Interaction?

Help?

INTENTION FROM A CHILD’S POINT OF VIEW

Children are driven by their

desires, curiosity, impulses &

needs

They are full of big ideas that they

can’t quite yet explain

Their understanding of danger or

cause & effect is not quite fully

developed yet

They do things “on purpose”, but

the purpose is for their learning or

expression, not to annoy adults

They learn through their

interactions with people and the

world.

TESTING OUR LIMITS

It’s a healthy toddler’s job to test our limits. But when they are stuck testing they are not:

o Playing

o Socializing

o Creating

o Learning

o Fulfilling their potential

Examining Our Labels

Negative

Examining Our Labels

Positive

Children Need To Feel Worthwhile

Adult is thinking:

• “Where the heck did the permanent

marker come from?”

• “I don’t have time for this!”

• “ He is just doing that so that I will

have to clean it all up.”

He is thinking:

“I can write my letter!”

“I went potty all by myself!”

Discipline for young children should be:

Developmentally appropriate

Focused on specific behavior

Accompanied by language

Immediate

Consistent (across settings, times,

caregivers)

Flexible (based on level of

transgression)

Planned (behavior should be

anticipated)

Emotionally neutral

Culturally acceptable ( may need to

negotiate)

Resources:

PITC Module I Social Emotional Growth &

Socialization:

Guidance and Discipline

Helping Young Children Thrive: Everyone Needs

Attention, Tamar Jacobson (2018)

http://csefel.vanderbilt.edu/documents/reading_cues.p

df

https://www.janetlansbury.com/

76

Funding for this project was made possible by

OKFutures, a grant known as the Preschool

Development Grant Birth Through Five, Grant No.

90TP0037. This grant was awarded to OPSR by the

U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services &

Education and is administered by the Administration

for Children and Families. This event is the sole

responsibility of OPSR and does not necessarily

represent the official views of the Office of Child Care,

the Administration for Children and Families, or the

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

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